ID: 8144 Updated by: sniper Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Old-Status: Feedback Status: Closed Bug Type: Apache related Assigned To: Comments: No feedback. --Jani Previous Comments: --------------------------------------------------------------------------- [2000-12-06 19:42:18] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Could you please try the latest release candidate: http://www.php.net/distributions/php-4.0.4RC4.tar.gz I have been running PHP on Solaris 2.6 as Apache DSO for a long time without any kind of problems.. To get useful backtraces, add --enable-debug to your configure line. --Jani --------------------------------------------------------------------------- [2000-12-06 16:57:34] [EMAIL PROTECTED] We've been trying to get PHP installed into our web server configuration, and been having a devil of a time. We're able to get everything compiled: ./configure --prefix=/opt/php/4.0.3pl1 --with-apxs=/opt/httpd/1.3.14/sbin/apxs --with-mysql=/usr/local --without-gd --with-config-file-path=/usr/local/httpd/etc/php.ini but as soon as the module is enabled in the srm.conf, apache starts to dump core. Almost any content - not just PHP - starts to cause a core dump. Even if .php is never called, we seem to have the problem. A truss isn't entirely useful: close(12) = 0 Incurred fault #6, FLTBOUNDS %pc = 0xEF15DAD4 siginfo: SIGSEGV SEGV_MAPERR addr=0x00000068 Received signal #11, SIGSEGV [caught] siginfo: SIGSEGV SEGV_MAPERR addr=0x00000068 chdir("/export/httpd") = 0 sigaction(SIGSEGV, 0xEFFFF160, 0xEFFFF1E0) = 0 getpid() = 9894 [9887] kill(9894, SIGSEGV) = 0 setcontext(0xEFFFF360) Received signal #11, SIGSEGV [default] siginfo: SIGSEGV pid=9894 uid=72 *** process killed *** It seems to happen after a lstat64() or a close() on a file. Apache refused to dump core, even though permissions seem to be set fine, etc. We've also spend a couple of hours with gdb trying to step through it, but we're having no luck getting symbols to show up (it's a bit out of our abilities, I guess, since it's running as a DSO). We have a baseline httpd server that we only put DSOs into, so I can't really rebuild it statically without much gnashing of teeth; at this point, I don't know if that would fix the problem. I'm not sure where to turn next. Web and bug searchs show up a few similar-sounding problems related FDs, but our httpd has plenty of room for more file descriptors. Any suggestions as to what could be causing this bug, or how to track it down, would be most helpful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Full Bug description available at: http://bugs.php.net/?id=8144 -- PHP Development Mailing List <http://www.php.net/> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To contact the list administrators, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]